. . . . "Princess Langwidere is a fictional character who is first introduced in L. Frank Baum's third Oz book titled Ozma of Oz, published in 1907. Langwidere is not the protagonist nor necessarily the antagonist in Baum's Oz novel. She is portrayed as an arrogant and pampered character of annoyance with a distasteful personality to entertain the reader for the plot of the story involving the return of Oz's main heroine and child protagonist named Dorothy Gale from Baum's first Oz book titled The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, published in 1900."@en . "Princess Langwidere is a fictional character who is first introduced in L. Frank Baum's third Oz book titled Ozma of Oz, published in 1907. Langwidere is not the protagonist nor necessarily the antagonist in Baum's Oz novel. She is portrayed as an arrogant and pampered character of annoyance with a distasteful personality to entertain the reader for the plot of the story involving the return of Oz's main heroine and child protagonist named Dorothy Gale from Baum's first Oz book titled The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, published in 1900. Langwidere is the highly narcissistic, spoiled, vain and conceited niece of King Evoldo who lives in a tiny Kingdom in the magical Land of Ev, which is a very small enchanted land with little population, that happens to neighbor the magical Land of Oz. Ev is a very desolate place, inhabited only by the Royal Family of Ev, their subjects and the gang of bad-mannered creatures known as the Wheelers, who inhabit the country also. \n* Elements from the books Ozma of Oz and The Land of Oz are both used in the 1985 Walt Disney cult classic film Return to Oz. Princess Langwidere's character is combined with that of the wicked witch Mombi and renamed \"Princess Mombi\"."@en . "Langwidere"@en . . . . .